A global survey of 1,000 IT decision-makers with more than 250 employees conducted by Dell Technologies finds on average organizations managed 13.53 petabytes (PB) of data in 2019, a nearly 40% increase since 2018.
The same survey also finds that as the amount of data has increased, so, too, has the cost of downtime. Those costs increased by 54% in the same period, resulting in an estimated total cost of $810,018 in 2019.
The survey also notes 82% of respondents suffered a disruptive event in the last 12 months, with the total cost of a data loss now on average exceeding $1 million.
Not surprisingly, the survey finds that a lot of the data that organizations are trying to protect resides in the cloud, thanks mainly to the rise of a variety of application use cases. The top five areas of investment cited by survey respondents include cloud-native applications (58%), artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) (53%), software-as-a-service (SaaS) applications (51%), 5G and cloud edge infrastructure (49%), and Internet of Things/endpoints (36%).
Nearly, three-quarters of respondents (71%) noted these emerging technologies create more data protection complexity and 61% said they increase risks. The survey also finds 81% of respondents said their existing data protection solutions will not be able to meet all future business challenges.
Specific areas where existing data protection platforms are expected to fall short include being able to recover data after a cyberattack (69%), recover data from a data loss incident (64%), comply with regional data governance regulations (62%), and meeting backup and recovery service level objectives (62%).
Among organizations that have adopted these emerging technologies the percentage of organizations struggling with adequately protecting data is as follows:
- 5G and cloud edge infrastructure (67%)
- AI and ML platforms (64%)
- Cloud-native applications (60%)
- IoT and endpoint (59%)
- Robotic process automation (56%)
The survey also finds organizations prefer public cloud/SaaS (43%), hybrid cloud (42%) and private cloud (39%) as deployment environments for new applications. In the case of edge computing deployments, 62% cited private clouds as being the platform that will be relied on most to protect data.
Bob Ganley, senior marketing consultant for cloud at Dell EMC, said the biggest challenge for organizations will be finding a way to centrally manage backup and recovery across multiple cloud computing platforms. Those platforms inevitably will span multiple types of public and private clouds accessed as a service and deployed in local data centers. Most organizations are relying on a “mash-up” approach to cloud computing where there is no unified control plane, so as they add each new cloud platform their total cost increases, he said Ganley, noting it’s now only a matter of time before IT organizations start to centralize the management of those multiple clouds to rein in those costs.
It’s not clear to what degree that centralization effort will revolve around IT automation enabled by application programming interfaces (APIs) and best DevOps processes versus traditional data protection tools based on graphical user interfaces (GUIs). However, given the amount of data involved, it is more than likely that existing approaches to data protection are not going to scale, so a fundamental change in how backup and recovery is managed is now all but inevitable.